Reviews

Legendborn by Tracy Deonn

stringerjulieanne's review against another edition

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4.25

Overall the book was written & enjoyable to read. It's different than any other book I've read this year (aside from certain tropes). Pacing was slow-medium throughout the book, and some aspects of the plot and character building felt underwhelming. And the info dumping was confusing at times. Regardless I will be picking up the next book in the series at some point! 

niall_mckenna's review against another edition

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adventurous dark emotional mysterious medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

roguewolf98's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional inspiring mysterious fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes

5.0

Legend born book 1&2 are my number 1 favourite books of 2024 ( and close second for all time favourite books). Please please read! You won’t be disappointed 

thebiblioklept's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional hopeful mysterious slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

emilysant's review against another edition

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4.0

4.5

nadibabe's review against another edition

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5.0

This was not what I was expecting. So so good! The fantasy I have been needing.

heartscontent's review against another edition

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5.0

You can find this review of Legendborn on my blog, Heart's Content!

So, you know this unwavering feeling in your heart about the love you feel for your best friend? This unshakable fondness you have for them? Yes, I’m questioning that right now. Why? Thank you for asking. My friend both made and ruined my life a little by making me read Legendborn before the second book’s release. *wipes away tears*

Also, warning: while I won’t be speaking about any big spoilers, there maybe a few here and there so please proceed if you’ve already read the book or are not worried about being a little aware of some stuff before reading. Also this is a fairly long review.

Legendborn was a very very intense read for me from the very first page; and with every page into the book the emotions only heightened. The book’s pace starts at full tilt and remains so for a good while. Bree hits the ground running so fast that I was originally grappling to understand what was happening and where we were heading. Initially I wished for a single moment of break from all the movement in the book and kept wondering about the pace and why everything felt so overwhelming and all at the same time. Then…THEN, there was this sudden shocking revelation that Tracy pulls and the pace just stops…it feels like everything stops. The emotions that come with that revelation plus the pace drop was such a fantastic representation of the protagonist’s state of mind, her mental and emotional struggle that it really hits you hard. *stands up and claps*

The plot was perhaps the most quietly intricate story line I have seen in a long long while. Tracy is either a magical genius who has planned and written down every single thread weaved into the story or she’s a unicorn and has written as the story took her forward. Either way is miraculous. The main plot: the one with the magic, the legacy, the history, the secrets and the truth; then the emotional plot: with it’s own set of pain, struggle, realisation, healing and action; and then the societal plot: the one connecting to people’s ambitions, behaviour, thoughts, racism, representation, blatant disrespect, trust, turmoil, friendships, loyalty and love… All of this in one book. I admit, I figured out the big twist but all the little ones I was fantastically blind to; so even if you like me figure out the big plot-twist all the small ones will trip you up enough that at no point will you feel like this book is predictable.

The world-building was initially overwhelming for me, especially paired with the bullet train that was the pace. But with a little bit of time (which we get fairly a lot of given how big the book is) we start to quickly make sense of the rules of the world and follow along easily. That being said, the world that Tracy has created is frankly genius and while I may have figured the big plot twist I hadn’t an idea how it would pan out and the way that it was written ticked off all the plot and sub-plot points so well I was in shock for a good ten seconds and then wanted to run laps because it felt like some Avengers-saved-the-world-goosebumps-moment. So another woot woot from me.

The characters all so strangely both fit perfectly into the roles they’d been written into and at the same time broke out of some of their moulds without losing their basic characterisation. I enjoyed watching the unravelling of secrets around characters and while I may have called it on some aspects of some characters, the others I was super blind to. I truly doubted nobody and trusted everybody and I was both right and wrong. I enjoy consistency as much as I enjoy growth and both of those are something Tracy wrote beautifully.

There may have been one single point that was written that I felt was a liiiiiitttle hard to believe simply because it happens so fast and that it had taken me a moment to come to terms with the shock … but I do think that sometimes one small seed of thought can grow a tree, so why not at the most crucial moment would someone not believe a friend, a comrade … a soldier.

Five stars from me. Bless me with an ARC for the next book, Universe.

Edit: Thank you Universe for blessing me with an ARC of book two. Now how about book three, hmm?

telennify's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark emotional mysterious sad tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.5

emptzuu's review against another edition

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The author attempts to highlight the struggles of POC, but I feel it was done in a way that wasn’t productive. The portrayal of a constantly victimized Black character only reflects one perspective, as if they're always preoccupied with race. While injustice and unfairness are real issues, the approach felt heavy-handed and spoon-fed to the reader. The protagonist came across as entitled, whiny, and weak. Although she was self-righteous and bold in her opinions, she fell apart when facing both internal and external challenges. The character felt clichéd and poorly developed.

The love interest, Selwyn Kane, was also a tired stereotype—troubled past, dark curly hair, tattoos, and, of course, gleaming amber eyes. This kind of portrayal is overdone, and it would be refreshing to see new approaches to male characters.

A better example, although not YA, is The Fifth Season. It features strong women who aren’t just victims but fully realized characters, and it lets the reader draw their own connections to culture and real-world oppression. While I appreciate the representation, this book wasn’t for me.

sathyadgs95's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark mysterious reflective tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? N/A

4.25

 Legendborn was a very very intense read for me from the very first page; and with every page into the book the emotions only heightened. The book’s pace starts at full tilt and remains so for a good while. Bree hits the ground running so fast that I was originally grappling to understand what was happening and where we were heading. Initially I wished for a single moment of break from all the movement in the book and kept wondering about the pace and why everything felt so overwhelming and all at the same time. Then…THEN, there was this sudden shocking revelation that Tracy pulls and the pace just stops…it feels like everything stops. The emotions that come with that revelation plus the pace drop was such a fantastic representation of the protagonist’s state of mind, her mental and emotional struggle that it really hits you hard. *stands up and claps*

The plot was perhaps the most quietly intricate story line I have seen in a long long while. Tracy is either a magical genius who has planned and written down every single thread weaved into the story or she’s a unicorn and has written as the story took her forward. Either way is miraculous. The main plot: the one with the magic, the legacy, the history, the secrets and the truth; then the emotional plot: with it’s own set of pain, struggle, realisation, healing and action; and then the societal plot: the one connecting to people’s ambitions, behaviour, thoughts, racism, representation, blatant disrespect, trust, turmoil, friendships, loyalty and love… All of this in one book. I admit, I figured out the big twist but all the little ones I was fantastically blind to; so even if you like me figure out the big plot-twist all the small ones will trip you up enough that at no point will you feel like this book is predictable.

The world-building was initially overwhelming for me, especially paired with the bullet train that was the pace. But with a little bit of time (which we get fairly a lot of given how big the book is) we start to quickly make sense of the rules of the world and follow along easily. That being said, the world that Tracy has created is frankly genius and while I may have figured the big plot twist I hadn’t an idea how it would pan out and the way that it was written ticked off all the plot and sub-plot points so well I was in shock for a good ten seconds and then wanted to run laps because it felt like some Avengers-saved-the-world-goosebumps-moment. So another woot woot from me.

The characters all so strangely both fit perfectly into the roles they’d been written into and at the same time broke out of some of their moulds without losing their basic characterisation. I enjoyed watching the unravelling of secrets around characters and while I may have called it on some aspects of some characters, the others I was super blind to. I truly doubted nobody and trusted everybody and I was both right and wrong. I enjoy consistency as much as I enjoy growth and both of those are something Tracy wrote beautifully.

There may have been one single point that was written that I felt was a liiiiiitttle hard to believe simply because it happens so fast and that it had taken me a moment to come to terms with the shock … but I do think that sometimes one small seed of thought can grow a tree, so why not at the most crucial moment would someone not believe a friend, a comrade … a soldier.